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I've Worked At Costco For 18 Years. These 8 Kirkland Signature Items Feel High-end.

  • I've worked at Costco for 18 years, so I have a few favorite high-quality items I like to get there.
  • In my opinion, the Kirkland Signature eyeglasses are comparable to those of designer brands.
  • The Kirkland Signature hard seltzers are tasty and perfect to bring to parties or tailgates.
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    I've worked at Costco for 18 years and love picking up high-quality products for my family. Oftentimes, I buy items from Costco's house brand, Kirkland Signature, which makes over 350 products, from food items to home essentials.

    I find that buying products from the Kirkland Signature brand, which made up about a quarter of Costco's revenue in 2021, saves my family money.

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    Here are eight high-quality Kirkland Signature items I grab for my family of four at Costco.

    Prices may vary by location.


    Kirkland Lake Food And Artisan Market Open For The Summer

    Breadcrumb Trail Links

    Published Jun 19, 2024  •  Last updated Jun 19, 2024  •  2 minute read

    donut makerKim Prince of Lil Bites Donuts prepares some of her delicious treats during the first day of the Kirkland Lake Food and Artisan Market. The market has been a staple in Kirkland Lake for several years and keeps growing. PHOTO/BRAD SHERRATT jpg, KW, apsmc Will EbyEnglehart's Will Eby of We Wooden creations is back at the Kirkland Lake Food and Artisan Market for another year. He says the Kirkland Lake market is great and it is a good way to get the word out about his creations. PHOTO/BRAD SHERRATT jpg, KW, apsmc Cotton CandyKelly Desjardins of Kelly's Kreations shows off some of the cotton candy that she makes. Desjardins is one of dozens of people who are participating in this year's Kirkland Lake Food and Artisan Market. PHOTO/BRAD SHERRATT jpg, KW, apsmc

    Despite the sweltering temperatures on Tuesday (June 18) people lined up at Civic Park for the opening of the Kirkland Lake Food and Artisan Market. 

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    Hailey Clarke, supervisor of community programs for the Kirkland Lake Recreation Department stated it was a great kick off to the season. 

    "I am very excited. It is a beautiful day for our first day, which is nice. It is a bit hot, but we are keeping cool so it's a good day." 

    Clarke is extremely pleased with the number of vendors who have chosen the Kirkland Lake market, which she says is a sign of its continued growth. 

    "It is awesome, and it is just going to keep coming. We are going to continue to grow and have even more variety. You can get your treats, vegetables, a hot dog, and some crafts for your house. It is a perfect set up right now. " 

    One of the new vendors this season is Kirkland Lake resident Kim Prince and her business, Lil Bites Donuts. She explained the idea of starting the business came out of a conversation with her kids. 

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    "We were talking about different ways of maybe doing a summer job for them and making some money for them; teach them a little bit about hard work and business." 

    She added 'I saw this machine on Market Place and that is what got me thinking of making donuts. I am having fun and its busy, but I am having a great time." 

    Prince added she is thinking about expanding to some degree by looking at doing special events, parties, corporate gathering. As she put it, she is very new to this, but she is loving it. 

    One of the out-of-town artisans who can be seen at the market is Englehart's Will Eby from We Wooden Creations. 

    Eby creates what is known as hand-burned pyrography which is the free-handed art of decorating wood or other materials with burn marks resulting from the controlled application of a heated object such as a poker. 

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    This is Eby's third season at the market and he says "This market is a great market. It is being part of the local community surrounding where I live." 

    For Eby, Pyrography started out as a hobby after he had some health issues. "It was a way for me to be able to do something. It was a hobby that became full time," he said. 

    And as for how the business is going, Eby stated "with the economy there have been challenges but I have learned how to maneuver within it. I also have started to offer a teaching course and workshops as well." 

    Meantime another Kirkland Laker, Kelly Desjardins is at the market with her business called Kelly's Kreations. 

    Desjardins makes candy floss along with a number of baked goods, "I like to be creative, create different things. It is not just cotton candy. There are frozen foods; chilly, Shepard's pie and baked beans." 

    The Kirkland Lake Food and Artisan Market is open at Civic Park Tuesday's from 3pm to 6pm until October. 

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    News Near Sault Ste. Marie


    Economic Punditry And The 'Hot Dog Guy' Problem

    The Revolving Door Project, a Prospect partner, scrutinizes the executive branch and presidential power. Follow them at therevolvingdoorproject.Org.

    "We're all trying to find the guy who did this." If you've spent any significant amount of time on social media in the last few years, you've likely come across this catchphrase and/or its accompanying image, known colloquially as the "hot dog guy." The viral meme originated with a skit from I Think You Should Leave—Tim Robinson and Zach Kanin's sketch comedy show—where Robinson, clad in a hot dog costume, attempts to convince a group of people that he definitely wasn't responsible for driving a hot dog–shaped car into a storefront. Screenshots and gifs of Robinson frantically delivering the line have been all over the internet since the show's 2019 Netflix debut, and are often invoked in reaction to individuals complaining about problems they've directly contributed to.

    As public pessimism about the economy continues despite cooling inflation, many in the political media class find themselves having a "hot dog guy" moment, trying to explain this disconnect without implicating themselves. A prime example of this phenomenon is Washington Post opinion columnist Catherine Rampell, who late last month attempted to make sense of "why everything Americans think about the economy is wrong."

    In her piece, Rampell cites Harris-Guardian polling data that highlights the divergence between public conceptions of the economy and actual economic metrics. She notes that while unemployment has remained below 4 percent for the longest period of time since the late 1960s, nearly half (49 percent) of respondents believe that the unemployment rate is at a 50-year high. In a similar vein, nearly half (49 percent) of the poll's respondents believe that stock markets have been down since the beginning of the year, when the opposite is true; the S&P 500 is up more than 12 percent this year after rising 23 percent in 2023.

    Rampell then offers explanations for why these misconceptions are present, some more valid than others. She rightly points out that terms like "recession" and "inflation," which describe very specific conditions for trained economists, are used differently by laypeople. Whereas economists have celebrated a slowing in price growth since mid-2022, the general public—in hoping that costs for everyday goods return to their pre-pandemic levels—are much less likely to acknowledge that inflation has gone down.

    Read more from the Revolving Door Project

    Rampell also engages in some vague criticism about those in the media doing both a "lousy job" of helping the public make sense of the economy (in a manner more in line with trained economists) and "generally giv[ing] more play to bad economic numbers than good ones." However, this introspection proves rather superficial when she ultimately pins the blame on news consumers for their own ostensible preferences for negative coverage. It only follows then that her solution is to simply urge the public to "reward" positive coverage of the economy with their attention.

    What makes Rampell's sudden concern about public misreadings of the economy so ironic is just how much her own writing has contributed to such distorted views. One simply has to look through her reporting on the 2021-2022 inflationary period to find that she herself has consistently demonstrated a fundamental misunderstanding of the reason for soaring costs.

    In fact, referring to her inflation coverage as a "misunderstanding" is quite generous. Rampell has remained an outright opponent of the idea that corporate profits were largely responsible for sustained inflation during the early pandemic period. Sellers' inflation—which posits "that, in significantly concentrated sectors of the economy, coordinated price hikes can be a significant driver of inflation"—has been routinely disparaged by Rampell as both "lazy populist demagoguing" and a "conspiracy theory."

    Yet, for all her antagonism to sellers' inflation (in 2022 alone, she published at least eight pieces decrying the notion), Rampell has never once engaged with the argument head-on. Instead she prefers to attack the "greedflation" straw man in an attempt to hand-wave away those to her left as foolish sloganeers who don't understand basic economics ("Corporations are always out to make a buck. That's their job," duh). If corporations always have the motive and the means to raise prices, then what the pandemic provided was what investigators would consider the "opportunity" to take full advantage of consolidated markets.

    If Rampell herself remains unwilling to accurately cover the economy, how can she then turn around and blame the public for being misinformed?

    The implications of this contradiction bleed into her proposed solution to the problem of low economic literacy. If anyone is responsible for highlighting accurate and insightful economics coverage to combat misinformation, it would be an economics reporter. Yet Rampell has continually refused to engage with the ever-growing body of research vindicating the sellers' inflation thesis. And not just from left-leaning organizations or heterodox economists, but the likes of the Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank, which has even produced research noting that corporate profits were (and have previously been) substantial contributors to inflation during economic recoveries. If Fed economists aren't enough, Rampell could simply look around. The European Central Bank, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Bank for International Settlements, European Commission, and more have all published studies blaming corporate profits for driving price surges.

    In direct opposition to her supposed "special emphasis on data-driven journalism," Rampell has never once given any column space to any of the aforementioned research. Likewise, she has ignored recent scandals—like RealPage's rent-gouging algorithm or Pioneer Natural Resources CEO Scott Sheffield's attempts at gas price-fixing—that provide evidence of increasingly concentrated corporate power unduly raising prices in real time.

    With all this in mind, it's hard not to think of Rampell as the hot dog guy. But if the analogy still seems far-fetched, let me point you to a pro-Costco piece she published a mere five days after the economic misunderstandings piece. In it, Rampell attempted to use the company's commitment to, well, a $1.50 hot dog as proof that the left's concerns over big business are overblown.

    This is ironic, not just because of the hot dog–related subject matter, but also because Rampell (yet again) ignores inconvenient facts to push forth her narrative. The notion that the retail giant is a "miracle of capitalism" for keeping its food court items cheap looks much less convincing when juxtaposed with the fact that—despite already high profits—Costco continues to hike prices on other goods and is considering doing so for its membership fees. (Indeed, the Costco hot dog is one of the best-known examples of loss-leader products, which lure people in with an amazing price in the hope that they shop around and buy other, undiscounted products.) Funnily enough, Rampell's piece was published the same day reporters revealed Costco's plans to sell its customers' data to build out its ad network. As executive director of Groundwork Collaborative Lindsay Owens quipped, it might be truer to say that the "price of a hot dog [is] $1.50 and your identity."

    Unsurprisingly, neither the price offsets nor the data selling were mentioned in her article.

    Public negativity about the economy isn't totally unfounded. The economy is far more than lines on a graph or data points in a vacuum. As such, the strength of an economy shouldn't only be based on the criterion of classically trained economists looking backwards. That large swaths of the public feel so pessimistic about their financial security has less to do with their fundamental "wrongness" about how the economy works and more to do with the perception that the economy no longer works for them. Why would Rampell assume the customer and market are always right, but market participants (ordinary Americans) are wrong about the economy?

    That being said, commentators like Rampell have continued to report in a manner that exacerbates, rather than alleviates, misconceptions about the economy, especially in regard to who is to blame for high prices. Rather than chastising the public for not intrinsically knowing better, they should re-evaluate their own contributions to the problem.






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